Journal of International Medical Research (Jun 2020)

Epidemiology of fatal/non-fatal suicide among patients with chronic osteomyelitis (COM): a nationwide population-based study

  • Chih-Hung Hung,
  • Jih-Yang Ko,
  • Pei-Shao Liao,
  • Chen-Wei Yeh,
  • Chieh-Cheng Hsu,
  • Mei-Chen Lin,
  • Horng-Chaung Hsu,
  • Shu-Jui Kuo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060520919238
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48

Abstract

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Objective Chronic osteomyelitis (COM) can induce systemic inflammation, and systemic inflammation may be associated with suicide tendency. However, no studies have investigated the correlation between COM and suicide tendency. Methods The aim of this population-based study was to determine the epidemiology of fatal/non-fatal suicide among COM patients. Subjects with at least two outpatient visits or one course of inpatient care diagnosed with COM were recruited into a COM cohort. The control/COM subject ratio was approximately 4:1 matched by age, sex, major depression coding and index year (COM patients). Subjects with suicide attempts before COM diagnosis and subjects aged <20 years were excluded. Results COM patients had 1.93 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.11–3.36) times the risk of fatal/non-fatal suicide as control subjects. Considering death as the competing event of fatal/non-fatal suicide, COM patients had 1.76 (95% CI: 1.03–3.01) times the risk of fatal/non-fatal suicide (competing risk regression model). The effect of COM on fatal/non-fatal suicide was more prominent among diabetic patients. COM severity also correlated with the risk of fatal/non-fatal suicide. Conclusions More attention must be paid to suicide tendency among COM patients.